Charles Émile Jacque (1813–1894)
“Landscape—Plough Hitched to Rest” (aka “Paysage
- charrue attelée au repos”), 1846, printed by Auguste Delâtre
(1822–1907) and published by the Alliance des Arts (aka Marchant) (fl.c.1830–80),
Paris.
Etching on chine collé with plate tone on
heavy wove paper with wide margins as published.
Size: (sheet) 24.6 x 36 cm; (plate) 5.6
x 11.6 cm
Inscribed on plate: (lower left) “Ch.
Jacque 1846 / Alliance des Arts 140, r. de Rivoli”; (lower right) “Imp. Aug.
Delatre … [illegible]'.
Guiffrey 1866 111 (undescribed state) (J-J
Guiffrey 1866, “L'Oeuvre de Charles Jacque: catalogue de ses eaux-fortes et
pointes seches”, Paris); IFF 163 (Inventaire
du Fonds Français: Bibliothèque Nationale, Département des Estampes, Paris,
1930)
The British Museum offers the following
description of this print:
“Horse-drawn plough in a field, in
profile to left; later impression, with publisher's and printer's addresses, of
print executed in 1846”
Condition: richly inked, faultless
impression in pristine condition (i.e. there are no tears, holes, folds,
stains, abrasions or foxing). This print is in a superb/museum-quality
condition.
I am selling this beautifully preserved
etching by one of the luminaries of the Barbizon School for AU$138 (currently
US$102.71/EUR88.50/GBP77.31 at the time of posting this print) including
postage and handling to anywhere in the world (but not, of course, any import
duties/taxes imposed by some countries).
If you are interested in purchasing this
unpretentiously simple and very beautiful etching, please contact me
(oz_jim@printsandprinciples.com) and I will send you a PayPal invoice to make
the payment easy.
This print has been sold
For me the beauty of this etching lies
in the loosely laid lines connoting a rapidly executed plate … and I have no
doubt that this is true. In fact I can picture in my mind’s eye Jacque sitting
on the edge of a freshly ploughed furrow as he inscribes his printing plate with this image; hence the reason for the fairly low angle of view and the reason that
the horse and plough in middle ground—and I should mention that there is
another lightly sketched in the far distance—are aligned parallel to the furrow
on which Jacque sat.
The fact that this was a rapidly
executed print has a slightly interesting outcome as, unlike Jacque's more
formal studies, the publisher of this etching is the Alliance des Arts noted to
be a publisher of “cheap” prints. Indeed, the British Museum even draws
attention to this fact in a letter Vincent van Gogh wrote to his brother Theo
dated 20 August 1880:
“Je crois que tu pourrais peutêtre trouver tout juste ce
qu'il me faut à l'Alliance des Arts, où l'on a les lithographies des Artistes
Contemporains &c. qui s'y vendent extrêmement bon marché”
(transl. "I believe you
might find just what I need at the Alliance des Arts, where they have the
lithographs from contemporary artists &c., which they sell at an
extremely cheap price").
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